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•
Memories, Memories Wow!
mmmmmmmmmm
3SHsi§i§E
^Mm\
1 *& "T»KI 1 • WBM
'^K. X
ww ~ tm*m9&\ ^^W
BfcJ * '
CAROLINIAN photos by Helen s<m/brd
>% (cbu>€uua/i
Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy"
VOLUME XXVII Z531 WOMAN'S COLLEGE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, GREENSBORO, N. C, MAY 1», 1946 ■NUMBER 24
Faculty Advisers Appoint
Next Year's Assistants
Junior Advisers Will Help
Orient Incoming Freshman
To Ways of College
Junior assistants, who are to work
with the incoming freshmen next year,
have been chosen by the faculty ad-visors
daring the past week.
Bach year Chancellor W. C. Jackson
appoints faculty members to serve as
faculty advisors for the incoming fresh-man,
to aid in orienting them at Wom-an's
College, and to help them all
through their freshman year. These
faculty members choose an assistant
from the junior class to assist him or
her in directing these groups of fresh-man.
R-sponsibility
"We juniL, assistants have been
**r*tiar>DxJjic:he worK that they have
dTCT",. Miss Ht>len Burns, freshman
class chairman, said "They feel it a
responsibility which they take very
seriously. Faculty advisors try to
choose girls who are academically satis-factory
and who have qualities of
responsibility and good judgement."
Junior Assistants
Fifty-four junior assistants have been
chosen. However, the list is, as yet, not
complete. Those all ready chosen are as
follows: Martha Allen, Gertrude Ar-cher,
Frances Acheraft, Betsy Barnes.
Ann Barnett, Beverly Bell, Bess Broth-ers,
Lita Bulla, Betsy Ann Bulluck,
Shirley Carter, Gladys Chambers,
Peggy Cleminer, Linda Cloer, Page
Coleman, Esther Cresson, Martyvonne
Dehoney, Barbara Emanuel. Peggy
Fincher, Jean Flanozan, and Hilda
Folger. »
Frances Fox, Shirley Harris, Rose-mary
Hermann, Marjorie Hollister,
Margaret Hudson, Alice Ingram, Alice
Keister, Elizebeth Kittrel, Alice MeGll-vary,
Katherine Malloy, Louise Martin,
Rose Morton, Carlita Nesslinger, Eliza-beth
Osborne, Allene Parks, Margery
Jean Perry, Helen Sewell, Mary Alice
Stevens, Marietta Thompson, Maxine
(Continued on Page Six)
English Department Honors
Dr. LeonardB. Hurley, Head
The department of English honored
Dr. Leonard B. Hurley, recently ap-pointed
head of the English Depart-ment,
at a banquet in the O. Henry
Hotel May 3. Mr. A. C. Hall officiated
as toastinaster, and Dr. W. C. Jack-son
and Miss Harriet Elliott expressed
informal greetings. Special guests were
Mrs. Hurley and daughter, Suzanne,
Dr. and Mrs. Jackson, and Miss Elliott
Dr. Hurley, chairman of freshman
English, is in charge of the lecture
series, and is chairman of the curricu-lum
committee. He served as acting
head of the department until he was
appointed officially.
Office Asks Students
To Report Conflicts
Students having e\iuiiinut ion con-flicts,
or having more than two
exams posted for one day, should
report this on blanks furnished
by the registrar's office before
noon, Monday, May 13.
Gray, Mclver House
Buy War Stamps 100%
Gray and Mclver House went
IM% in Ike stamp sales this week.
WtnMd lead* hi—I purchased
with $MJ*. Sales for April 29-
May 5 are:
Hall AoMunt Pet.
Gray I 16.50 100
Mclver $ 2.85 100
coit $ mm 98
Jamison $ 20.55 98
Kirkland $ 10.70 97.7
Weil $ 19.00 97
Bailey $ 19.00 87
Cotten $ 10.85 85
WinfleU $ 50.50 85
Woman's $ 6.90 83
S. Spencer $ 22.40 80
N. Guilford $ 20.55 72
Mary Foust $ 15.05 67
N. Spencer . . 9 16.30 64.5
Shaw $ 8.90 64
Hinshaw $ 7.25 47
Southern Conference
Elects Officers May 6
Students Scatter Booklets
To Encourage Registration
Devora Poliakoff was elected perma-nent
chairman of the Woman's College
chapter of the Southern Conference of
Human Welfare at the meeting Mon-day
night. Plans were made for the
distribution of pamphlets Friday and
Saturday, May 10-11 to simulate voting
in Greensboro.
Other officers elected for the next
year are Lucy Rodgers, secretary-treasurer
; and Marjean Perry, pub-licity
chairman.
Pamphlets were distributed in High
Point and Greensboro by five members
(Continued on Page Five)
Chairman Truly Bryan
Announces Members
Of Honor Committee
New Head Hopes To Maintain
Academic Honor, To Make
Social Honor Realized
The Honor Committee, under the
chairmanship of Truly Bryan, has been
making plans for bringing the Woman's
College Honor Policy into student con-sciousness
during the coming year.
The members of this Committee have
been announced by Truly as Bootsie
Webb, Page Coleman, Martha Allen,
Susan Womack, Nancy Beam Funder-burk,
and June Holtzendorf. Miss Vera
Largent has also been asked to serve
on' the Honor Committee.
Truly has announced that the Com-mittee
intends to maintain the aca-demic
honor which has been realized
here' at the Woman's College and jtn
plate new emphasis on tne social honor
which must be realized before the
Honor Policy cau come into its full
scope.
In an effort to bring the freshman
into a fuller realization of the impor-tance
and significance of the W. C.
Honor Policy, the new Honor Commit-tee
discussed the possibility of letters
to the freshman and pre-school litera-ture.
Included in the Pre-School Confer-ence
will be a discussion of the Honor
Policy and the accompanying problem.
The new committee succeeded Juanita
Hatfleld, Celeste Ulrich, Billie Rivers,
Truly Bryan, Page Coleman and Martha
Allen.
Music Education Club Elects
Peggy Mclver President
Officers of the Music Education Club
for the coming year have been an-nounced
as Peggy Mclver, president;
Nancy Eagle, vice-president; Florence
Pearl, secretary ; and Mary Byrd John-son,
treasurer.
Summer School To Open June 6;
Classes Meet Five Times Weekly
Students May Take Six Semester Hours;
Cost Will Be $80, $35 For Day Students
Seniors Must Practice
For Their Unmusical
If the seniors wish to have a
senior unmusical, they will have to
show up for rehearsals. If they do
not, they will be eliminated from
the east.
Rehearsal Monday night will be
in Students' Building 8:00-10:00.
During the rest of the week, Tues-day
through Friday, rehearsals will
be every night in Students' Build-ing
7:00-9:00. An important re-hearsal
will be held 5:00-0:00 in
Aycock Auditorium on Monday
afternoon.
Y Announces Plans
For Annual Banquet
Old and New Cabinets Hear
Of Arrangements for Week
Of Religious Emphasis
A religious emphasis week will take
place at. Woman's College Octol»er
13-HS, announced Miss Maxine Garner.
Religious Activities Director, at a joint
meeting of the retiring and incoming
officers of the YWCA cabinet, Monday
night. May 6. She explained the rela-tion
of the YWCA to the total program
of religious activities at the college.
She also discussed the t'nited Student
Christian Council with which the
campus Y and the student church
groups are affiliated.
Miss Garner emphasized, "Our task
I in this organization is to co-operate
with the other religious groups in the
college community, to supplement them
at certain points, and continually to
seek new ways to promote religious
living at the college."
(Continued on Page Five)
Future Sophomores
Elect Zurich-Bound
Jan Shore Chairman
June Holtzendorf, Martha
Fowler, Betsy Umstead
Serve As Other Officers
In a '.--li^Ltlj le»s colorful campaign
than the one of February 1, the present
freshman class elected their officers for
next year.
Jan Shore of Winston-Salem was-elected
as president of the rising Sopho-more
Class. She has been a member of
Coit Hall Board, Freshman Class
Editor of Pine Needles, and is on the
Baptist Student Union Council for next
year.
Serving with Jan as Sophomore of-ficers
will be June Holtzendorf, vice-president
: Betsy Umstead, secretary;
Martha Fowler, treasurer: Beth Clapp
and Betty Jane Carr, Clara Jean Cooke,
and Sarah Denny, legislature.
The new vice-president, June Holtzen-dorf,
has engaged in the following ac-tivities:
Hall Board, Proctor, Faculty-
Student P. E. Council, Westminister
Fellowship Council, Dolphin-Seal Club,
Camp Counselor's Club, Varsity Basket-ball
team. Varsity Gym team, and
Treasurer of the R. A. for next year.
Betsy Umstead has been Treasurer
of the Freshman Class, an Assistant
Proctor, and will be on the R. A. Coun-
(Continued on Page Four)
Dare We Eat Less Bread To Let the Hungry Eat?
Letters of Gratitude Received From European Families
Show Possibilities of Relieving Other Victims of War
The world is starving. People in
Vienna are existing on 800 calories a
day. Two-thirds of the children in
France in their teens either lost weight
or gained none during the last year.
Austrian ration cards provide for only
1,600 calories, but what the card calls
for and what can be found in the stores
are two different things. For several
years there has been no milk ration in
Hungary.
The Woman's College Service Lea-gue,
in an effort to ease the condi-tion
of these innocent sufferers, has
planned a drive extending through
May 20 to send boxes of, food, clothing
and essentials of life to seventy-one
European families. During the year,
various classes, organizations and in-dividuals
among the faculty and stu-dents
have realized the desperate con-dition
of so many of these people and
have continually sent boxes to them.
Certainly in all instances these pack-ages
from America have met enthusias-tic
reception. The humble gratitude
that pours from the hearts of these
people is enough to make any of us
spend the time and money necessary to
equip boxes for them.
Letters from recipients in Italy tell
of the incredible inflation that stalks
Italy. From France comes the news of
serious shortages of clothing as well as
of food. The Christmas package sent to
a well-to-do French family ocntained
the first new pairs of pajamas,that a
young girl has had since 1038. The
mother wrote: "Your Christmas pack-age
came Just for Christmas Ere and
the child immediately claimed both
pairs of pajamas. And she needed them
more than you can guess, since '38
she's been wearing little summer ones
I made her then. And since she's got-ten
tall and the pajamas stayed the
same size, they left lots of gaps in be-tween
and around."
The 6ame family declared, "I could
simply kiss every piece of soap that
was in your package." And as a final
declaration as to the benefit of the box-es
that have been sent to them from
Greensboro, comes the statement: "We
manage to pull through, thanks to
your American packages."
Bnt there are only a few European
families wfio have interested and bene-volent
American friends who have the
energy and consideration to ship these
supplies to Europe. It is to the other
needy families that the War Service
League proposes to send their boxes.
In countries where there is no heat,
no adequate housing facilities, no
electric power, it is necessary that
people have warm clothing in addition
to energy-giving food.
Before May 20, every student on
this campus will be asked to contri-bute
money or actual food and cloth-ing.
Each of the dorms is responsible
for a certain number of boxes which
they will furnish and pack and which
the WSL will mail to Europe. Certain-ly
no one of us will refuse our coopera-tion
In ihis effort to help those who
suffered in our stead. During a former
drive on this campus to alleviate the
food shortage, the War Service League
collected 1,700 cans of foodstuff which
had been contributed by W.C. students.
In connection with the dire need for
food all over the world, the Service
Information concerning the 1946 Summer Session at the "Woman's
College has been issued in a summer school bulletin. Registration will
take place on Thursday, June 6 and the session will close with final
^examinations on Thursday, July 18.
Students will be permitted to take
six semester hours of work in this six-weeks
period. Classes meet five times
a week. Of course, regular college
credit is given for courses offered in
summer school.
Cost
The entire charge for the term of
six weeks will be eighty dollars. This
sum Includes room, meals, laundry,
medical services, lectures, and enter-tainments.
Day studt-iiis may attend
summer school for only thirty-five dol-lars.
The dues and fees are payable
upon entrance.
Special features of the 1940 Summer
Session will be Girl's State, June 10-14,
the P. T. A. Institute, June 24-27, Inter-national
Relations Institute, June 17-21,
and Drama and Literary Workshops.
Recreation
The committee on recreation and
entertainment is headed by Miss Ethel
Mnrtns of the physical education facul-ty.
The recreation program is designed
to appeal to n wide variety of inter-ests,
ranging from athletic activities to
bridge tournaments. The swimming
pool, tennis courts and gymnasium can
be constantly in use both during the
day and in the evening.
In addition to the general opportuni-ties
for entertainment there will be
music concerts, a play, and art forum
and a series of lectures by outstanding
speakers of the State in the fields of
education, social problems and political
science.
Men students will be welcomed in the
Summer School for such courses as
they may desire to take. Kirkland Hall
will be URed for these men students.
Courses
Courses offered by regular and visit-ing
teachers for the Woman's College
Summer Session will be as follows:
Art: Education in the Elementary
School, Figure Drawing and Paint-ing,
Experimental Workshop, Painting;
General Biology ; BS8A: Elementary
Typewriting, Intermediate Typewriting,
Duplicating Machines, Transcribing
Machines, Advanced Accounting, Intro-duction
to Retailing, Office Machines,
Calculating Machines, Planned Work
Experience, Thesis, Field Study, Or-ganization
and Administration of Co-operatives
Programs, Curriculum Prob-lems
in Business Education, Improving
Instructors in Office Practice, Retail
Personnel Organization, Merchandising,
Display Details, Marketing, and Eco-nomics
of Consumption.
Chemistry courses will be General
Chemistry and Organic and Physiologi-cal
Chemistry. Economics will inc]ude
Principles of Accounting and Principles
of Marketing. Under English Courses
there will be Freshman English, Sopbo-
(Continued on Page Three)
League is endeavoring to make every
student conscious of the fact that food
need not be wasted on this campus.
Every student is urged to take all that
she can eat, but also to be absolutely
sure that she eats everything that she
takes. If our bread consumption is
cut, then the dining room will notice
that we do not require so much bread.
W. C. will not need to buy so much
food from the wholesale house and
there will be more surplus bread which
will be available for shipment to Eu-rope.
This is a direct means by which
Woman's College Students may help
solve the food shortage.
In Europe the number of students
has doubled since pre-war days. Some
young men and women have the courage
and faith to struggle for an education
under conditions in which most of us
would not live. Twenty-five percent of
Paris' 45,000 students are without
shelter. For those of us who study un-der
ideal conditions there is a responsi-bility
to others of our generation and
to their families. We have the facts;
grim need stares ns in the face.
UJV.C. Men's Glee Club
To Appear In Chapel
The men's glee club of University
of North Carolina will appear in
Chapel, Tuesday, May 11.

NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material.

•
Memories, Memories Wow!
mmmmmmmmmm
3SHsi§i§E
^Mm\
1 *& "T»KI 1 • WBM
'^K. X
ww ~ tm*m9&\ ^^W
BfcJ * '
CAROLINIAN photos by Helen s% (cbu>€uua/i
Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy"
VOLUME XXVII Z531 WOMAN'S COLLEGE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, GREENSBORO, N. C, MAY 1», 1946 ■NUMBER 24
Faculty Advisers Appoint
Next Year's Assistants
Junior Advisers Will Help
Orient Incoming Freshman
To Ways of College
Junior assistants, who are to work
with the incoming freshmen next year,
have been chosen by the faculty ad-visors
daring the past week.
Bach year Chancellor W. C. Jackson
appoints faculty members to serve as
faculty advisors for the incoming fresh-man,
to aid in orienting them at Wom-an's
College, and to help them all
through their freshman year. These
faculty members choose an assistant
from the junior class to assist him or
her in directing these groups of fresh-man.
R-sponsibility
"We juniL, assistants have been
**r*tiar>DxJjic:he worK that they have
dTCT",. Miss Ht>len Burns, freshman
class chairman, said "They feel it a
responsibility which they take very
seriously. Faculty advisors try to
choose girls who are academically satis-factory
and who have qualities of
responsibility and good judgement."
Junior Assistants
Fifty-four junior assistants have been
chosen. However, the list is, as yet, not
complete. Those all ready chosen are as
follows: Martha Allen, Gertrude Ar-cher,
Frances Acheraft, Betsy Barnes.
Ann Barnett, Beverly Bell, Bess Broth-ers,
Lita Bulla, Betsy Ann Bulluck,
Shirley Carter, Gladys Chambers,
Peggy Cleminer, Linda Cloer, Page
Coleman, Esther Cresson, Martyvonne
Dehoney, Barbara Emanuel. Peggy
Fincher, Jean Flanozan, and Hilda
Folger. »
Frances Fox, Shirley Harris, Rose-mary
Hermann, Marjorie Hollister,
Margaret Hudson, Alice Ingram, Alice
Keister, Elizebeth Kittrel, Alice MeGll-vary,
Katherine Malloy, Louise Martin,
Rose Morton, Carlita Nesslinger, Eliza-beth
Osborne, Allene Parks, Margery
Jean Perry, Helen Sewell, Mary Alice
Stevens, Marietta Thompson, Maxine
(Continued on Page Six)
English Department Honors
Dr. LeonardB. Hurley, Head
The department of English honored
Dr. Leonard B. Hurley, recently ap-pointed
head of the English Depart-ment,
at a banquet in the O. Henry
Hotel May 3. Mr. A. C. Hall officiated
as toastinaster, and Dr. W. C. Jack-son
and Miss Harriet Elliott expressed
informal greetings. Special guests were
Mrs. Hurley and daughter, Suzanne,
Dr. and Mrs. Jackson, and Miss Elliott
Dr. Hurley, chairman of freshman
English, is in charge of the lecture
series, and is chairman of the curricu-lum
committee. He served as acting
head of the department until he was
appointed officially.
Office Asks Students
To Report Conflicts
Students having e\iuiiinut ion con-flicts,
or having more than two
exams posted for one day, should
report this on blanks furnished
by the registrar's office before
noon, Monday, May 13.
Gray, Mclver House
Buy War Stamps 100%
Gray and Mclver House went
IM% in Ike stamp sales this week.
WtnMd lead* hi—I purchased
with $MJ*. Sales for April 29-
May 5 are:
Hall AoMunt Pet.
Gray I 16.50 100
Mclver $ 2.85 100
coit $ mm 98
Jamison $ 20.55 98
Kirkland $ 10.70 97.7
Weil $ 19.00 97
Bailey $ 19.00 87
Cotten $ 10.85 85
WinfleU $ 50.50 85
Woman's $ 6.90 83
S. Spencer $ 22.40 80
N. Guilford $ 20.55 72
Mary Foust $ 15.05 67
N. Spencer . . 9 16.30 64.5
Shaw $ 8.90 64
Hinshaw $ 7.25 47
Southern Conference
Elects Officers May 6
Students Scatter Booklets
To Encourage Registration
Devora Poliakoff was elected perma-nent
chairman of the Woman's College
chapter of the Southern Conference of
Human Welfare at the meeting Mon-day
night. Plans were made for the
distribution of pamphlets Friday and
Saturday, May 10-11 to simulate voting
in Greensboro.
Other officers elected for the next
year are Lucy Rodgers, secretary-treasurer
; and Marjean Perry, pub-licity
chairman.
Pamphlets were distributed in High
Point and Greensboro by five members
(Continued on Page Five)
Chairman Truly Bryan
Announces Members
Of Honor Committee
New Head Hopes To Maintain
Academic Honor, To Make
Social Honor Realized
The Honor Committee, under the
chairmanship of Truly Bryan, has been
making plans for bringing the Woman's
College Honor Policy into student con-sciousness
during the coming year.
The members of this Committee have
been announced by Truly as Bootsie
Webb, Page Coleman, Martha Allen,
Susan Womack, Nancy Beam Funder-burk,
and June Holtzendorf. Miss Vera
Largent has also been asked to serve
on' the Honor Committee.
Truly has announced that the Com-mittee
intends to maintain the aca-demic
honor which has been realized
here' at the Woman's College and jtn
plate new emphasis on tne social honor
which must be realized before the
Honor Policy cau come into its full
scope.
In an effort to bring the freshman
into a fuller realization of the impor-tance
and significance of the W. C.
Honor Policy, the new Honor Commit-tee
discussed the possibility of letters
to the freshman and pre-school litera-ture.
Included in the Pre-School Confer-ence
will be a discussion of the Honor
Policy and the accompanying problem.
The new committee succeeded Juanita
Hatfleld, Celeste Ulrich, Billie Rivers,
Truly Bryan, Page Coleman and Martha
Allen.
Music Education Club Elects
Peggy Mclver President
Officers of the Music Education Club
for the coming year have been an-nounced
as Peggy Mclver, president;
Nancy Eagle, vice-president; Florence
Pearl, secretary ; and Mary Byrd John-son,
treasurer.
Summer School To Open June 6;
Classes Meet Five Times Weekly
Students May Take Six Semester Hours;
Cost Will Be $80, $35 For Day Students
Seniors Must Practice
For Their Unmusical
If the seniors wish to have a
senior unmusical, they will have to
show up for rehearsals. If they do
not, they will be eliminated from
the east.
Rehearsal Monday night will be
in Students' Building 8:00-10:00.
During the rest of the week, Tues-day
through Friday, rehearsals will
be every night in Students' Build-ing
7:00-9:00. An important re-hearsal
will be held 5:00-0:00 in
Aycock Auditorium on Monday
afternoon.
Y Announces Plans
For Annual Banquet
Old and New Cabinets Hear
Of Arrangements for Week
Of Religious Emphasis
A religious emphasis week will take
place at. Woman's College Octol»er
13-HS, announced Miss Maxine Garner.
Religious Activities Director, at a joint
meeting of the retiring and incoming
officers of the YWCA cabinet, Monday
night. May 6. She explained the rela-tion
of the YWCA to the total program
of religious activities at the college.
She also discussed the t'nited Student
Christian Council with which the
campus Y and the student church
groups are affiliated.
Miss Garner emphasized, "Our task
I in this organization is to co-operate
with the other religious groups in the
college community, to supplement them
at certain points, and continually to
seek new ways to promote religious
living at the college."
(Continued on Page Five)
Future Sophomores
Elect Zurich-Bound
Jan Shore Chairman
June Holtzendorf, Martha
Fowler, Betsy Umstead
Serve As Other Officers
In a '.--li^Ltlj le»s colorful campaign
than the one of February 1, the present
freshman class elected their officers for
next year.
Jan Shore of Winston-Salem was-elected
as president of the rising Sopho-more
Class. She has been a member of
Coit Hall Board, Freshman Class
Editor of Pine Needles, and is on the
Baptist Student Union Council for next
year.
Serving with Jan as Sophomore of-ficers
will be June Holtzendorf, vice-president
: Betsy Umstead, secretary;
Martha Fowler, treasurer: Beth Clapp
and Betty Jane Carr, Clara Jean Cooke,
and Sarah Denny, legislature.
The new vice-president, June Holtzen-dorf,
has engaged in the following ac-tivities:
Hall Board, Proctor, Faculty-
Student P. E. Council, Westminister
Fellowship Council, Dolphin-Seal Club,
Camp Counselor's Club, Varsity Basket-ball
team. Varsity Gym team, and
Treasurer of the R. A. for next year.
Betsy Umstead has been Treasurer
of the Freshman Class, an Assistant
Proctor, and will be on the R. A. Coun-
(Continued on Page Four)
Dare We Eat Less Bread To Let the Hungry Eat?
Letters of Gratitude Received From European Families
Show Possibilities of Relieving Other Victims of War
The world is starving. People in
Vienna are existing on 800 calories a
day. Two-thirds of the children in
France in their teens either lost weight
or gained none during the last year.
Austrian ration cards provide for only
1,600 calories, but what the card calls
for and what can be found in the stores
are two different things. For several
years there has been no milk ration in
Hungary.
The Woman's College Service Lea-gue,
in an effort to ease the condi-tion
of these innocent sufferers, has
planned a drive extending through
May 20 to send boxes of, food, clothing
and essentials of life to seventy-one
European families. During the year,
various classes, organizations and in-dividuals
among the faculty and stu-dents
have realized the desperate con-dition
of so many of these people and
have continually sent boxes to them.
Certainly in all instances these pack-ages
from America have met enthusias-tic
reception. The humble gratitude
that pours from the hearts of these
people is enough to make any of us
spend the time and money necessary to
equip boxes for them.
Letters from recipients in Italy tell
of the incredible inflation that stalks
Italy. From France comes the news of
serious shortages of clothing as well as
of food. The Christmas package sent to
a well-to-do French family ocntained
the first new pairs of pajamas,that a
young girl has had since 1038. The
mother wrote: "Your Christmas pack-age
came Just for Christmas Ere and
the child immediately claimed both
pairs of pajamas. And she needed them
more than you can guess, since '38
she's been wearing little summer ones
I made her then. And since she's got-ten
tall and the pajamas stayed the
same size, they left lots of gaps in be-tween
and around."
The 6ame family declared, "I could
simply kiss every piece of soap that
was in your package." And as a final
declaration as to the benefit of the box-es
that have been sent to them from
Greensboro, comes the statement: "We
manage to pull through, thanks to
your American packages."
Bnt there are only a few European
families wfio have interested and bene-volent
American friends who have the
energy and consideration to ship these
supplies to Europe. It is to the other
needy families that the War Service
League proposes to send their boxes.
In countries where there is no heat,
no adequate housing facilities, no
electric power, it is necessary that
people have warm clothing in addition
to energy-giving food.
Before May 20, every student on
this campus will be asked to contri-bute
money or actual food and cloth-ing.
Each of the dorms is responsible
for a certain number of boxes which
they will furnish and pack and which
the WSL will mail to Europe. Certain-ly
no one of us will refuse our coopera-tion
In ihis effort to help those who
suffered in our stead. During a former
drive on this campus to alleviate the
food shortage, the War Service League
collected 1,700 cans of foodstuff which
had been contributed by W.C. students.
In connection with the dire need for
food all over the world, the Service
Information concerning the 1946 Summer Session at the "Woman's
College has been issued in a summer school bulletin. Registration will
take place on Thursday, June 6 and the session will close with final
^examinations on Thursday, July 18.
Students will be permitted to take
six semester hours of work in this six-weeks
period. Classes meet five times
a week. Of course, regular college
credit is given for courses offered in
summer school.
Cost
The entire charge for the term of
six weeks will be eighty dollars. This
sum Includes room, meals, laundry,
medical services, lectures, and enter-tainments.
Day studt-iiis may attend
summer school for only thirty-five dol-lars.
The dues and fees are payable
upon entrance.
Special features of the 1940 Summer
Session will be Girl's State, June 10-14,
the P. T. A. Institute, June 24-27, Inter-national
Relations Institute, June 17-21,
and Drama and Literary Workshops.
Recreation
The committee on recreation and
entertainment is headed by Miss Ethel
Mnrtns of the physical education facul-ty.
The recreation program is designed
to appeal to n wide variety of inter-ests,
ranging from athletic activities to
bridge tournaments. The swimming
pool, tennis courts and gymnasium can
be constantly in use both during the
day and in the evening.
In addition to the general opportuni-ties
for entertainment there will be
music concerts, a play, and art forum
and a series of lectures by outstanding
speakers of the State in the fields of
education, social problems and political
science.
Men students will be welcomed in the
Summer School for such courses as
they may desire to take. Kirkland Hall
will be URed for these men students.
Courses
Courses offered by regular and visit-ing
teachers for the Woman's College
Summer Session will be as follows:
Art: Education in the Elementary
School, Figure Drawing and Paint-ing,
Experimental Workshop, Painting;
General Biology ; BS8A: Elementary
Typewriting, Intermediate Typewriting,
Duplicating Machines, Transcribing
Machines, Advanced Accounting, Intro-duction
to Retailing, Office Machines,
Calculating Machines, Planned Work
Experience, Thesis, Field Study, Or-ganization
and Administration of Co-operatives
Programs, Curriculum Prob-lems
in Business Education, Improving
Instructors in Office Practice, Retail
Personnel Organization, Merchandising,
Display Details, Marketing, and Eco-nomics
of Consumption.
Chemistry courses will be General
Chemistry and Organic and Physiologi-cal
Chemistry. Economics will inc]ude
Principles of Accounting and Principles
of Marketing. Under English Courses
there will be Freshman English, Sopbo-
(Continued on Page Three)
League is endeavoring to make every
student conscious of the fact that food
need not be wasted on this campus.
Every student is urged to take all that
she can eat, but also to be absolutely
sure that she eats everything that she
takes. If our bread consumption is
cut, then the dining room will notice
that we do not require so much bread.
W. C. will not need to buy so much
food from the wholesale house and
there will be more surplus bread which
will be available for shipment to Eu-rope.
This is a direct means by which
Woman's College Students may help
solve the food shortage.
In Europe the number of students
has doubled since pre-war days. Some
young men and women have the courage
and faith to struggle for an education
under conditions in which most of us
would not live. Twenty-five percent of
Paris' 45,000 students are without
shelter. For those of us who study un-der
ideal conditions there is a responsi-bility
to others of our generation and
to their families. We have the facts;
grim need stares ns in the face.
UJV.C. Men's Glee Club
To Appear In Chapel
The men's glee club of University
of North Carolina will appear in
Chapel, Tuesday, May 11.